Taylor & Co. v. Pickett
This text of 3 N.W. 514 (Taylor & Co. v. Pickett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
— I. The defendants, in support of the allegations 'of their answer that plaintiffs had sold to the defendant Pickett intoxicating liquors in violation of law, offered in evidence an indictment found in the Mahaska Distinct Court, April 28th, 1876, charging Pickett with nuisance committed by the sale of intoxicating liquors. The plaintiffs objected to the introduction of this evidence because the indictment was found long after the note sued upon was given, and is immaterial and incompetent as evidence. The objection was overruled and the indictment was admitted in evidence, as stated in the abstract, to show the fact of the sale of the liquors. This ' action of the court the plaintiffs assign as error. The indictment'was clearly inadmissible to establish any fact in this case. In admitting it in evidence the court erred.
“22. A party holding a permit has no right to sell at other places than that at which the permit authorizes him so to do, and a sale made at some other place would be illegal, but when an order is sent by mail to the house, and the order filled at the house, then it would be a sale at the house where the order is filled.
“23. When an order is taken by an agent, subject to approval, and is not finally accepted until it reached the plaintiff’s place of business, then it would be a sale at the house.
“ 24. If the order is taken, but not subject to approval, and taken by the agent at a different place from the plaintiff’s business house, then the sale so made would be illegal.”
The appellants complain of the giving of the 24th instruction. They insist that the sale, in the contemplation of the statute, is made at the place where the property is kept, and where it is set apart and designated for the purchaser. This point has been determined adversely to the position of appellants in Tegler & Co. v. Shipman, 33 Iowa, 194. In.that case the plaintiffs, wholesale liquor dealers in Rock Island, Illinois, procured orders for the liquors in question through their agent at Jefferson, Iowa. The court say: “The pivotal
question in the ease is as to where the contract was made. If the agent sold the liquors to the defendant in Jefferson, anc^ forwarded to his principal a statement of such sale for them to fill by forwarding the liquors specified, then it was an Iowa , contract, and if the plaintiffs had no license to sell such liquors here, then they cannot recover. If the agent simply took an order from defendant upon his principals in Rock Island, which they might fill or refuse at their option, it was a Rock . Island contract, and the plaintiffs can recover unless it is shown that they sold the liquors with intent to enable the defendant to violate the provisions of the act for the suppression [470]*470of intemperance.” The above instructions are in harmony with the doctrine of this case, and are not erroneous. See, also,- Second National Bank of Louisville v. Curren, 36 Iowa, 555.
The statute makes such sale an offense without reference- to the- knowledge of the seller that- the purchaser was a minor. •The law does not declare the person selling under a permit, for the purposes authorized by statute, liable if the purchaser ehtertains a secret purpose of using the liquors for an unlawful purpose. We think this instruction is-erroneous.-
Ee VERSED.
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3 N.W. 514, 52 Iowa 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-co-v-pickett-iowa-1879.